
She's about 10 years old and happens to be in absolutely mint condition, really like new and honeyburst ash body with a maple neck is one of my dream finishes. She needed a good setup including some work on the frets and a neck re-seat, though. The neck, supposedly a #3, feels excellent to my hand, I had feared it might be too shallow, sort of shredder neck, but it's not.
This is one damn serious power strat. It looks beefier than a Legacy body, it's built beefier and it sounds beefier, too (have a Trib S-500 to compare to). SUSTAIN to no end with only very few soft spots, with a piano-like top end, thanks Saddle-Lock bridge. Very great clarity and note separation, and it stays in tune perfectly. The Jeff Beck bridge pup is normally not my favorite (too much mids) but in *this* guitar it has enough top end and also a deep tight bottom. The twin blades are a good compliment to that, and the coil split on the JB allows for additional sparkle when needed. I modded the tone pot so I can dial in various amounts of mid/treble bleed with the volume rolled-back, sort of bass control as there is no PTB with two pots like in Legacy's etc.
Power chords and drop-tuned riffing as well as hot leads are a pure joy but what that Invader really likes most is slower complex chordal stuff with only moderate crunch, every note and every playing detail is clearly heard (including any lack of skills), this where the guitar excels at. Sustain duration is on par with any Les Paul but the character is very unique, also different from my ASAT Super with it's super hot sc MFD pups (that's where its name came from?)...
Invaders -- let alone hardtailed ones -- really seem to be sort of an underdog guitar but now I'm one of those happy few in the know. Outstanding quality, playability and sound.